For The Love of Physics Articles

Posted April 08, 2010 by Lauren in Client News and Reviews

Katie Hafner reports on the growing trend of academic institutions putting courseware online. A few key college professors--like our client Walter Lewin--have began posting video lectures, syllabuses, and reading materials for free, helping to "dislodge higher education from its brick-and-mortar moorings." 

Hafner writes:

The undisputed rock star academic is Walter H. G. Lewin of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, who flies across the room to demonstrate that a pendulum swings no faster or slower when there is an added mass (Professor Lewin) hanging at the end.

. . .

If the mission of the university is the creation of knowledge (via research)...

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Posted May 20, 2009 by Lauren in Client News and Reviews

The MIT Muses surprise serenade for MIT Physics Professor Walter Lewin:

 

A compilation video of Walter Lewin's "Best Lines":

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Posted April 21, 2009 by Lauren in Client News and Reviews

College Too Expensive? Try YouTube

By AP/JAKE COYLE
April 9, 2009; Time

 

In 2002, the Massachusetts Institute of Technology launched the MIT OpenCourseWare with the plan to make virtually all the school's courses available for free online.

As a visitor, one almost feels like you've somehow sneaked through a firewall. There's no registration and within a minute, you can be watching Prof. Walter Lewin demonstrate the physics of a pendulum by being one himself. (See the 50 best websites of 2008.)

Last December, MIT announced that OCW had been visited by more than 50 million people worldwide. But why would institutions that charges a huge price for admission give away their primary product?

Ben Hubbard, program manager of the webcast project for the University of California, Berkeley, believes it has always been a part of a university's...

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Posted June 14, 2008 by Lauren in Agency Deals

MIT professor and YouTube star Walter Lewin's FOR THE LOVE OF PHYSICS, written with Warren Goldstein, which will tell how the author grew up during and after World War II, how he became a scientist, and how he fell in love -- first with physics and then with the craft of teaching physics to students, to Emily Loose at Free Press, in a major deal, in a pre-empt, by Wendy Strothman of The Strothman Agency (World).

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